Television-tracking app TV Time provided Business Insider a
list of the most anticipated new shows coming in 2019 that don't
have release dates yet.

They include HBO's "Watchmen" and Netflix's "The Witcher."

As 2019 looms, viewers can expect the return of some fan-favorite
TV shows, including the long-awaited third season of HBO's "True
Detective" starring Mahershala Ali.

But there are plenty of new shows coming up that could become
major hits that don't yet have release dates, including HBO's
"Watchmen" and Netflix's "The Witcher."

To find out what audiences are most looking forward to, we turned
to television-tracking app TV Time, which ranked the most
followed shows based on its over 13 million global users (the
shows provided don't have release dates yet).

The top eight most anticipated news shows are
below:

8. "First Wives Club" (BET)

caption

"The First Wives Club" (1996)

source

Paramount Pictures

The series, based on the 1996 movie moved about three
divorced women, moved from Paramount Network to BET, Deadline reported on Tuesday.
It stars Ryan Michelle Bathe, Jill Scott, and Michelle Buteau,
and premieres in January.

7. Untitled Fosse/Verdon Series (FX)

caption

Sam Rockwell

source

Larry Busacca/Getty

According to Deadline, FX greenlit an
untitled limited series from executive producer Lin-Manuel
Miranda about the romantic and creative relationship between
filmmaker Bob Fosse and dancer Gwen Verdon in July. Sam Rockwell
and Michelle Williams will star.

6. "City on a Hill" (Showtime)

caption

Kevin Bacon

source

Rich Polk/Getty Images for IMDb

Showtime gave a 12-episode series order to "City on a Hill" in
May, according to Deadline. It stars Kevin Bacon
and is executive produced by Ben Affleck and Matt Damon. The
series is about racism and the criminal justice system in Boston
in the early 1990s.

5. "Watchmen" (HBO)

source

HBO

"Lost" and "The Leftovers" co-creator Damon Lindelof is
developing HBO's first superhero series,
based on the acclaimed graphic novel by Alan Moore and Dave
Gibbons about masked vigilantes caught in a history-making
conspiracy after one of their own is killed. Lindelof's series is
expected to take place in the same universe of the novel, but
isn't a direct adaptation. It stars Regina King and Jeremy Irons.

4. "What We Do in the Shadows" (FX)

caption

"What We Do In the Shadows" (2014)

source

Unison

The series is based on Taika Waititi's 2014 film of the same name
about vampire housemates learning to adapt to modern
responsibilities. It follows a new group of
characters in a new location: Staten Island.

3. "Doom Patrol" (DC Universe)

source

DC Universe

DC describes the series, based
on its comic of the same name, as a "re-imagining of one of DC's
most beloved group of outcast Super Heroes: Robotman, Negative
Man, Elasti-Girl and Crazy Jane, led by modern-day mad scientist
Dr. Niles Caulder (The Chief)." It stars Brendan Fraser, Timothy
Dalton, Matt Bomer, and Alan Tudyk.

2. "Good Omens" (Amazon)

source

Amazon

Amazon's upcoming apocalyptic comedy "Good
Omens" is based on the novel by Terry Pratchett and
Neil Gaiman, about an angel and a demon who have enjoyed an
unlikely friendship for thousands of years, and must save the
world from destruction. It stars Michael Sheen, David Tennant,
and Jon Hamm.

1. "The Witcher" (Netflix)

source

Netflix

Former Superman actor Henry Cavill will star in this video-game
(and book) adaptation from Netflix about: "The witcher Geralt, a
mutated monster hunter, struggles to find his place in a world
where people often prove more wicked than beasts."